Labour has announced it will seek to provide tests and follow up
appointments in high street opticians to cut NHS waiting
lists.
There are currently 619,000 patients waiting for NHS eye care,
17,000 of whom have been waiting over a year.
An FOI last year revealed that hundreds of NHS patients have lost
their eyesight following their appointments being delayed since
2019.
One patient in Stoke was told he needed an urgent operation but
is still waiting seven months later. The operation could extend
his eyesight for another ten years, but he fears losing his
eyesight due to the waiting time.
To cut ophthalmology waiting lists, Labour would seek to
negotiate a national deal to deliver more routine outpatient care
in high street opticians, using existing funds. This would
include appointments like cataract pre-assessments and operation
follow ups, glaucoma monitoring, and common diagnostic tests.
Using optometrists in local opticians for more routine
appointments would free up hospital specialists to treat more
serious cases sooner, be more convenient for patients, and
provide better value for taxpayers’ money already being spent in
the service.
Provided they are willing to meet new standard NHS terms and
conditions, and demonstrate value for money, Labour will put high
street opticians to work to cut NHS waiting lists.
, Labour’s Shadow Health
Minister, announcing the reforms in a speech to the Institute for
Government, said:
“Patients are left with a desperate choice – wait and risk losing
their eyesight or pay to go private. This is the two-tier
healthcare system emerging under the Tories. It is unacceptable
and Labour will end it.
“There are 6,000 high street opticians in England, equipped with
specialist staff and kit that can get patients seen faster. We
will put them to work to beat the Tory backlog, and free up
hospital specialists to treat the patients in serious need. All
at greater convenience to patients and better value for the
taxpayer.”
Smyth also declared that Labour would wage a war on waste in the
NHS, with Labour setting out ten examples of money being
misspent, wasted, or unnecessary targets, costing the health
service as much as £10 billion.
New examples of waste include:
- Around 1 in 4 missed outpatient appointments are due to admin
issues, costing £300 million a year, and could
be avoided by reminding patients and giving them the option to
rearrange ahead of time
- An FOI of NHS trusts reveals that the NHS still spends
£200 million a year on paper and postage, a
decade after pledged the NHS would go
paperless. More recently, Hunt said “I am quite relieved that
most people seem to have forgotten that I made that promise.”
- Analysis of NHS figures shows that around 7 million patients
went to A&E last year because they can’t get an appointment
with their GP, leading to longer waits at hospital and costing
the NHS up to £2.5 billion more than if they had
seen a GP.
-
£176 million spent hiring private
ambulances and taxis to take patients to hospitals, because no
ambulances were available, double the amount spent in 2017/18,
according to FOIs submitted by Labour. Ambulances waited an
hour and 24 minutes or more outside of hospitals 42,000 times
in December, because hospitals didn’t have space to take their
patients.
Labour is pledging to halve spending on management consultants
and to launching a Red Tape challenge in Government to help
tackle rising costs and inefficiency. The Government removed a
cap on management consultants spend earlier this year, despite
evidence that NHS trusts which spend more on management
consultants become less efficient. Labour is pledging to
re-instate controls on spending on consultants and require an
assessment of whether services can be provided in-house.
Ends
Notes
Opthamology waiting lists: https://www.england.nhs.uk/statistics/statistical-work-areas/rtt-waiting-times/
Hundreds of NHS patients have lost their eyesight following their
delayed appointments:https://www.theguardian.com/society/2023/mar/21/hundreds-left-with-lost-or-damaged-eyesight-after-nhs-delays-research
One patient in Stoke feared he will go blind, as he’s been
waiting 7 months:https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-stoke-staffordshire-67914461
Almost 7 million patients last year went to A&E because they
couldn’t get a GP appointment. Treating patients in A&E is up
to ten times more expensive to the NHS than the average cost of
being seen by a GP: https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/audio-video/key-facts-figures-nhs
pledged the NHS would go
paperless in 2013, and five years later admitted “I am quite
relieved that most people seem to have forgotten that I made that
promise.”https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/09/11/book-appointment-gp-smartphone-app-new-nhs-plans/
Ambulance handover delays: https://www.england.nhs.uk/statistics/statistical-work-areas/ambulance-quality-indicators/ambulance-quality-indicators-data-2023-24/
Management consultants spend: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-11727761/Department-Health-spent-record-626MILLION-taxpayer-cash-management-consultants.html